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Why is Acute Pain a Problem ?. Thromboembolic events. Mobilisation. Postoperative confusional states. Well being/sleep/anxiety. Stress response/catabolism. Ileus. Cardiovasc. stress. Pulmonary function. Acute Pain. Analgesia and Enhanced Recovery. Ideal Analgesia. Safe and acceptable to patients (and surgeons!)No/low failure rateNear complete dynamic pain reliefNo gastrointestinal side effectsNo limitation of movement (side effects or equipment)Absence of other problem side effectsMay 9442
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1. Analgesic Aspects of ERAS Dr Susan Nimmo
Consultant Anaesthetist
Western General Hospital
Edinburgh
Age Anaesthesia Association
Annual Scientific Meeting
May 2008
4. Analgesia and Enhanced Recovery
5. Ideal Analgesia Safe and acceptable to patients (and surgeons!)
No/low failure rate
Near complete dynamic pain relief
No gastrointestinal side effects
No limitation of movement (side effects or equipment)
Absence of other problem side effects
May be multimodal
7. Benefits of Epidural Analgesia Dynamic pain control
Obtunds stress response
Reduction of ileus
Reduced post-operative pulmonary complications
Reduced myocardial ischaemia/infarction
Reduced incidence of DVT and pulmonary embolism
8. Dynamic Analgesia/Mobilisation
9. Causes of Ileus
Degree of surgical manipulation
Magnitude of inflammatory and stress response
Sympathetic reflexes
Opioids
Salt and water overload/bowel oedema
11. Outcome
64 patients randomised to epidural analgesia or PCA opioid
Elective colonic resection
Equivalent peri-operative care: early nutrition and assisted mobilisation as able
Carli et al. Am Soc Anesth 2002
12. Results Epidural group:
Lower pain and fatigue scores
Earlier return of bowel function
Significantly better 6 min walking test distance at 3 and 6 weeks
Significantly better health related quality of life scoring at 3 and 6 weeks
13. Our practice…. EPIDURAL FOR 72 HOURS:
T10/11 for left sided and anterior resections
T8/9 for right hemicolectomy
diamorphine or p/f morphine and 0.1-0.25% bupivacaine bolus
bupivacaine 0.1% and fentanyl 2 micrograms/ml infusion
Plus paracetamol
STEP DOWN:
oral tramadol (or fentanyl patch/ oral oxycontin)
paracetamol
? ibuprofen/celecoxib
15. Master Trial 915 “high risk” patients undergoing major surgery
Only respiratory failure less frequent
No effect on mortality
But
Better dynamic analgesia
No significant adverse consequences
??end points
??utilising analgesia to enhance recovery
16. Success of Epidural Analgesia 640 patients over 6 years
1/3 excellent analgesia (80% of time with no pain on movement; no pain at rest)
1/3 good analgesia (single occurrence of pain at rest)
1/3 poor quality analgesia
McLeod et al Anaesthesia 2001
17. How can we make our epidurals more effective? Correct placement
Insertion preop with block check
Facilities to resite
Adequate securing of catheter (and filter)
19. Epidural Complications: Drugs Complication
Drug errors
Respiratory depression
CNS toxicity
Hypotension
Motor blockade
20. Epidurals and colonic blood flowFluids versus vasopressors 15 patients – anterior resection for rectal carcinoma
Inferior mesenteric artery blood flow (Doppler)
Arterial line, oesophageal doppler cardiac output
Epidural induced hypotension reduced mesenteric A flow, which did not recover with fluid therapy alone but required the use of vasopressors.
Gould et al BJA 2002
21. BUT the Anastomosis…. Sympathetic block may increase colonic blood flow and minimise colonic distension
Early feeding may enhance gut blood flow
OR
Early motility may increase anastomotic disruption
Hypotension may compromise colonic blood flow, as may vasoconstrictors
Studies to date (small nos) do not tend to show convincing risk or benefit
ERAS results: no increase in anastomotic leak rate with epidurals and feeding (and laxative)
22. Hypotension
Limit block height
Optimal fluid management
Haemoglobin
Vasoactive drugs (noradrenaline, phenylephrine)
Oral ephedrine for prophylaxis of postural hypotension on mobilising
Early mobilisation
23. Contraindications to Epidural Analgesia Patient refusal
Anticoagulation
High risk of abscess
High risk of serious cardiovascular instability
(And failed epidural analgesia)
24. It’s not just analgesia….. How else do we provide?
Attenuation of the stress response
Dynamic analgesia
Reduction of ileus
Multimodal analgesia/opioid sparing
Intraop remifentanil
??NSAIDs/COX 2s
Local anaesthetic
Adjuvants eg ketamine, gabapentin
25. Local Anaesthetic Alternatives
Wound catheters
20mls levobupivacaine
x 4/ day
Improved analgesia and opioid sparing
(elastomeric pump systems)
28. Our practice….
Wound catheters – levobupivacaine
PCA opioid (morphine or fentanyl)
Regular paracetamol
? Ibuprofen/celecoxib
? Ketamine
29. Conclusions
Thoracic epidural analgesia is currently the gold standard – room for improvement
Systemic multimodal analgesia can be a good alternative
Effective analgesia is a pivotal requirement for enhanced recovery
31. ERAS(Enhanced Recovery After Surgery) An international collaboration group
Prof Henrik Kehlet
(Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, Scotland, Sweden)
32. Aims of ERAS
To establish evidence-based ERAS protocol
To document outcomes and compliance when core protocol applied in 5 different centres (prospective study) current
To examine individual elements of core protocol (randomised trials)
33. Discharge Criteria patient has good pain control on oral analgesics
patient is independently mobile, reached pre-op level
patient takes solid foods and has no IV fluids
all 3 criteria reached and patient willing to go home
34. Length of Stay - ? A Useful Endpoint
35. ERAS results
36. Results 80-99 years (3/02-11/05)
32 patients (elective resection with primary anastomosis – no stoma)
Mean LOS 12.8 days
Discharge criteria fulfilled 6.4 days
Deaths 1
Anastomotic leak rate 9%
37. Achievable in the elderly ? 74 patients over 70
Epidural analgesia/early feeding and mobilisation
Patients discharged at 5d
3% anastomotic leak rate
1% mortality
? Reduced “general” periop complications
Scarfenberg et al Int J Colorectal Disease 2007
38. Achievable in the elderly ? 87 patients mean age 77
Open colectomy ( 53% right)
Clear fluids POD 2, diet POD 3
PCA morphine
89.6% tolerated “early” feeding
Mean hospital stay 3.9 days, no anastomotic leaks, no deaths
Di Fronzo et al Am Coll Surgeons 2003
No advantage from thoracic epidural
Zutshi et al Am J Surg 2005
39. Any Questions
?